Ceolfrith

(c.642-716) Abbot of Wearmouth and Jarrow in the time of Bede. Commissioned the production of the Codex Amiatinus, the oldest surviving complete Latin Bible in one volume

(c.642-716) AbbotAbbot Head of an abbey of monks of Wearmouth and JarrowJarrow Dedicated to St Paul the monastery founded by Benedict Biscop in 684, as a sister house of Monkwearmouth, on land donated by king Egfrid of Northumbria by the River Tyne, after his return to England from Rome with Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury. Details of its foundation and activities are recorded by the Venerable Bede, most notably in his History of the Abbots, and his Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Bede died here in 735. The monastery was destroyed in c. 867 and again in 973; but may not have been deserted since in 1022 the bones of Bede were carried from Jarrow to Durham cathedral. Re-established in 1074, it ultimately became a cell of the monastic cathedral of Durham in 1083 and remained so until 1536 and the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the time of BedeBede, the Venerable (c.673-735) Anglo-Saxon historian and biblical scholar. Sent to study at the monastery of Wearmouth at seven; later transferred to Jarrow. Renowned in his lifetime for his learning, Bede wrote treatises on poetry, time and cosmography. Historical works include History of the Abbots, prose and verse versions of the Life of St Cuthbert and Ecclesiastical History of the English People.. Commissioned the production of the CodexCodex (pl. codices) (from caudex, the Latin word for tree bark). A book made up of folded sheets sewn along one edge. Amiatinus, the oldest surviving complete Latin Bible in one volume